Enter the characters you see below Sorry, we just need to make sure you’re not a robot. A map of the Atlantic Ocean depicting the tracks of nine tropical cyclones. This timeline includes information that was not operationally released, meaning that data from post-storm reviews by the National Hurricane Center, such as a storm that was not operationally warned upon, has been included. No tropical cyclones developed in the month of June. The 2014 Atlantic hurricane season officially begins. A visible satellite image of a well-formed hurricane, with multiple spiral bands and an eye, nearing landfall in North Carolina on July 3.

Hurricane Arthur nearing landfall in North Carolina. Tropical Storm Arthur transitions into an extratropical cyclone over the Bay of Fundy. The extratropical cyclone of Arthur dissipates off the eastern coast of Labrador. An image depicting the track of a short-lived tropical depression in the central and eastern Atlantic during late July 2014. Tropical Depression Two degenerates into a trough of low pressure well east of the Lesser Antilles. A visible satellite image depicting a disorganized hurricane located northeast of the Bahamas on August 4.

The extratropical cyclone of Bertha degenerates into a trough over the north-central Atlantic Ocean. A visible satellite image depicting a well-organized hurricane east of the United States on August 28. An image depicting the track of a short-lived tropical storm within the Bay of Campeche. The extratropical cyclone of Cristobal merges with a second cyclone over the far northern Atlantic. The remnant low of Dolly dissipates over central Mexico.

A visible satellite image depicting an organized and strengthing hurricane over the central Atlantic on September 15. The remnant low of Edouard merges with a frontal boundary well south-southwest of the Azores. A visible satellite image of a disorganized hurricane on October 12. Bermuda, becoming the first hurricane to do so since 1987’s Emily. Tropical Storm Fay degenerates into a trough of low pressure over the north-central Atlantic. A visible satellite image of a well-organized hurricane at peak intensity on October 16. The extratropical remnants of Hurricane Gonzalo is absorbed by a cold front over the north-central Atlantic Ocean.